Icelandic musician cooks up rock pastiche for the padded-cell set
If you dumped blues, power pop, psych rock and heavy metal into a
transmogrifying machine, the machine would rumble mysteriously, then
spit out a brightly colored block of a hitherto unimagined polymer
known as Mugison. The one-man band’s guitar-and-computer
pastiches have earned him the highest mainstream accolades in his
native Iceland, which implies that the Icelandic mainstream is a bit
more tolerant of unabashed weirdoes than its U.S. counterpart. At its
best, Mugiboogie sounds a bit like Spoon, if they were kind of
insane and way into Primus. Heavy-metal screams round off into blues
sneers over crispy-fried guitars, with the kind of spazzy rabidity
that’s synonymous with Ipecac label head Mike Patton. On this
prismatically diverse album, there will come a moment—perhaps during
the surprisingly self-descriptive psych-rock stomper “Jesus is a Good
Name to Moan,” or perhaps during its prog-metal foil, “I’m
Alright”—when you think, “Let’s all take a deep breath.” Personally, I
prefer Mugison when he’s mellower and more centered (as on languid,
synthetically symphonic folk tune “Deep Breathing”). But you gotta
admire a guy with the sack to name his George Harrison
rip-off/homage—wait for it—“George Harrison.”